The Ukrainian Museum and the Children of Chornobyl Relief and Development Fund are commemorating
the 25th Anniversary of the Chornobyl disaster with the exhibition Inside Chornobyl.

If you lived at Chornobyl, would you stay?

To the world, Chornobyl seems a place of danger, but for locals, Chornobyl is simply a fact of life. On
April 26, 1986, an explosion at the Chornobyl Nuclear Power Plant in Ukraine ‒ just 60 miles from the
ancient capital city, Kyiv ‒ changed history, sending radiation and political shockwaves across Europe.
Radioactive fallout contaminated 56,700 square miles of Ukraine, Belarus, and Russia, an area the size
of New York State.

In the popular imagination, the Chornobyl region is a wasteland ‒ forsaken, hazardous, and
inaccessible. And yet, a generation later, life continues in the radiation-affected areas. Six million people
still reside there.

The contaminated region is divided into four zones based on levels of radiation. The Chornobyl
Exclusion Zone, the most highly contaminated, is officially uninhabited. In fact, however, over 2,000
elderly villagers illegally resettled their homes and farms inside the Zone. Today nearly 400 remain.
More than 3,000 workers manage the Zone, living in the town of Chornobyl during four-day and 15-day
shifts. Another 3,800 employees commute daily to work at the Chornobyl plant from their new homes in
Slavutych.

After the accident, 188 nearby towns and villages were evacuated. Many were bulldozed. Some were
simply abandoned. Beyond the Exclusion Zone are three additional zones where radiation fell but
evacuation was not mandatory. In Ukraine, this included 2,293 villages. The accident and its indirect
consequences continue to affect these residents physically, economically, socially, and psychologically.
Some overcome these difficulties; others surrender to them.

How much radiation is safe? No one knows. Comprehensive medical research has never been done to
determine the health effects of long-term radiation exposure. In the absence of facts, people believe
rumors, propaganda, and their own first-hand experiences.

Why do people stay? A lack of alternatives. A sense of duty. Deep ties to the land. Decent jobs. Because
this is home.

The closer you are to Chornobyl, the less dangerous it seems. Instead of radiation, Chornobylites today
have new fears. They worry about their future. Keeping their jobs. Opportunities for their children.
Maintaining their hometowns.

If you lived here, would you stay?

The Chornobyl Angel ProjectA Childrenís Book Illustrated by Children

The book Chornobyl Angel is the result of an initiative by Anna Korolevska, the director of the National
Chornobyl Museum in Kyiv, Ukraine, who invited students at local art schools to illustrate paragraphs of text
from the book; of the 81 watercolors submitted, 24 were chosen for publication. The Ridna Shkola Ukrainian
school in Whippany, New Jersey, also took part in the project.

The Ukrainian Museum and the Children of Chornobyl Relief and Development Fund (CCRDF) are pleased to
present 11 of the extraordinary illustrations in Chornobyl Angel. They are on loan from the National Chornobyl
Museum and are being shown together with photographs from the Chornobyl Museumís archives.
The CCRDF is publishing Chornobyl Angel as a tribute to, and reminder of, the victims of the Chornobyl
catastrophe 25 years ago. Together, the CCRDF and the National Chornobyl Museum have dedicated the book
to all the men, women, and children around the world who have been affected by nuclear disasters.

Logistics partner:

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About the Museum
The Ukrainian Museum was founded in 1976 by the Ukrainian National Women's League of America as a showcase for Ukrainian culture. Since its founding, the Museum has amassed extensive collections of folk art, fine art, and archival material. It mounts several exhibitions annually; publishes accompanying bilingual catalogues; organizes courses, workshops, and other educational programs; and hosts a variety of public events. In April 2005 the Museum moved into a new, state-of-the-art facility in New York's East Village, funded entirely by the Ukrainian American community.